Month: July 2013

In my last blog post about my Rackspace monitoring solution I described why I deactivated the performance tracking: I measured the wire and not my blogs performance.

I was totally surprised that my post got an answer to that problem in three comments one and two days later. And those comments came from Rackspace employees. I never thought about contacting them about this. First of all, this was not on my high priority list and second, since I’m only using the cloud monitoring stuff for a dollar and a half per month, I never thought about bothering them with a request about that. I wanted to dig into it myself later, when time was right for it.

I knew that Rackspace is advertising with ‘fanatical’ support – but I never would have thought that they would scan random blogs for potential issues and support there. I am totally suprised and I think I already became a fan.

Now, the idea from Justin was to set the consistency level of the check from the default value QUORUM to ALL. In my case this changed the alerting behaviour from “Oh, two of the three zones are slow, let’s warn him.” to, “Well, both US zones are slow, but the EU zone London still performs good, let’s wait with an alert until that gets slow too”.

The other idea was to consecutiveCount to a larger value, so that an alert is only sent if the check fails for X consecutive times. I have this in mind, but for now the consistency level is totally enough for me to re-activate the check. So this is my new performance check I activated a day later:

With this in place I now get alerted whenever London thinks my Blog is slow, and it gives me response times from all three zones in that alerting mail. This check is just running for two weeks now, and alerted me two times. Both times the alert went green the check after, so the consecutive count would have prevented those mailings, but I think this ‘spam’ rate is still okay and I don’t see the need to fix this.

Actually, I’m pretty happy about those mails once in a while, because I feel that my monitoring is in place and working.

So the bottom line is: Rackspace support really, really rocks. And the monitoring can be tweaked to meet my needs.

His article is about the challenges of cross-platform development in general, and he brings up some rather good points on why some approaches will eventually fail.

I’m pretty sure he doesn’t even know about FireMonkey, but this is what he has to say on cross platform libraries in general:

One of the most common approaches developers attempt (and often provided by third parties as well) is to develop or use a library that abstracts away platform differences or claims to map a unique “meta API” to multiple platforms. These cross—platform libraries are conceptually attractive but practically unworkable over time. Again, early on this can work. Over time the platform divergence is real.

And then he continues:

Worse, as an app developer you end up relying on essentially a “shadow” OS provided by a team that has a fraction of the resources for updates, tooling, documentation, ..
[…]
It is important to keep in mind that the platforms are evolving rapidly and the customer desire for well-integrated apps (not just apps that run).

The very last point is what I already stated in my own post on why FireMonkey is wrong. I didn’t even write about the even more important first ones. And this only are quotes from one paragraph where he thinks about cross-platform libraries.

I strongly suggest that you take a few minutes and read what Sinofsky wrote about cross-platform development. And then, if you currently feel that FireMonkey could be the right tool for you, try to understand his points and re-think your position on cross-platform tooling. I’m sure you will see that FireMonkey can’t be the right tool for you – or anybody.

In the last post I mentioned how I set up my Rackspace Cloud Monitoring system to notify me when my Blog fails or performs badly.
I tweaked the configuration a little bit now: I deactivated the performance check.

Why is that? Because it did not monitor my Blog’s overall performance but just the quality of the transatlantic wires. And I can tell you: It’s very volatile.

While having constant good response times from the check zone in London, both U.S. zones are okay, bad, then critical and then okay again in a matter of some minutes. So I was spamming myself with that check.

I’d love to have a redundant performance check in place, but there are currently no two check zones in Europe, and I did not find a way up to now to restrict the performance check to the London values only. I think I’ll do some more research on that later. For now, I’m fine with the Code 200 ‘Up and running’ check.